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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH f J Monster Ray and Shark Hooked From Same Boat News Notes Its a Privilege to Live in TYPHOON IS LARGE Utah I rERRIFIC STORM SWEEPS Tooele Seven thousand bushels of sweet Valencia onions from eight acres is a record claimed by K. M. Clark of Orantsville. The onions were grown on the J. Keuben Clark farm. The onions are remarkable for their unusual size and for their uniformity. There weren't any culls in this patch, Mr. Clark said. Jnly Foreign Casualty Known; Dutch Resident of Hongkong; Few Are Saved; Loss May Reach 2,000 Delta A total of $1000 has been made available by Millard county residents for improvements on the road from Delta north to the Juab county line, Frank Paxton, chairman of tho inMillard county commissioners, formed the state road commission Tuesday. More money is available, ho said, if that amount is insulliclent to complete the work. Hongkong Two thousand Chinese Isherman are believed to have per-slie- Murray Approximately 5000 tourists traveling In 1500 automobiles stopped over in Murray during tho tourist season. The estimate covers th( period from May 1 to September ISO. Cars from all parts of America visited this city. Approximately a fourth of the tourists stayed for more than one night. It is estimated that the expenditure per car amounted to about $9.50. Six men buttled for three und one-hal-f hours oil the coast of Daytona Beach, Fla., recently with a 2,400-pounhammer-hea- d ray straining ;.t one line and a shark on another. Finally the monsters were killed, and they are shown above with their conquerors. d 2,000-poun- d Funeral of Commander John Rodgers at Arlington v- 1 - ST?.' J Vest Jordan Practically every iino of agricultural endeavor in this section has benefited as a result of Wed- Lincoln Relics Acquired by Nation Draper The season's first snowfall extinguished a fire in the mountains which for the past two weeks has destroyed an enormous area of watershed. Snow fell to a depth of several Inches Wednesday night and effective- fifty-fiv- e utmost value in long-lastin- delight g "Albers stands for Better Brcakfasu Albers A hot, nourishing cereal is tho prime morning need of a growing child. This is why the wise mother always serves Carnation Mush to His Highchair Highness. Whole wheat and delicious! LADIES and GENTLEMEN Why pay from five to ten doll&ra for tain pen or pencil? Get a Biff Boy a foun- self-fi- ll fountain pen or pencil. These pens and pencils will last you a lifetime, price $1.0 each. As there la a limited amount at thia price and they are going fast, send in youy order now. Send for my catalog, It'a tree. FRANK MILLER : I8T Third Avenue New York City In vx 4n learn by the simple methods outline In the 8HLF INSTRUCTION BOOK, The Guide to Commercial Art. This booklet containing lnstrno Mods equal to THN LB9SONS tent postpaid upon receipt of 11.00. Begin now to train for this welir paid profession. Bend for it today. one-tent- days. Three corn-copipes were eaten by Florine Stolich, one of the entombed members, it was learned at the hospital. The pipes relieved the longing for tobacco. b Col. Osborne S. Oldroyd, owner of g W. T. Fisher recently Myton brought to Myton from his ranch near Independence a freak alfalfa plant, which resembles a miniature tree. It is four and a half feet tall and the stem is about twice the size of a lead pencil. It had about 100 branches. It is one of many growing along the banks of an irrigation ditch on his ranch. Salt Lake During 1925 the Salt Lake union stockyards handled 1.111,- - the famous Lincoln collection of relic! In Washington, receiving from Capt. Harris Jones, assistant director of pub 11c buildings and Apples Invade; Cafes Feeling Effect grounds, a check for $50,000 In payment for the historic baked aprelics, the buying of which was authorized by congress at the last session. Chicago Colonel Oldroyd has devoted the last sixty years of hls life and most of ths ples at 15 cents each are flirting with money he has been able to earn toward building the collection, which Is a fall in price. The government buhoused In the old mansion at Washington where the martyred President reau of agricultural economics reIra Wall of Des Moines, Iowa, Is con- died. ported Thursday that shipments of sidered Americas most versatile boy apples throughout the United States scout. He holds G9 of the merit have increased 35 per cent in the last badges presented by the boy scout week, and are now of much larger organization for proficiency In varivolume than shipments of either poous accomplishments, and has only tatoes or grapes. Bushel baskets of those for Interpreting and bugling to various kinds of apples are selling as sin to have every one on the list. low as 50 cents wholesale, with extra Wall, who became a boy scout In fancy boxes $1.25 and barreled apples 1017, was given the highest honor at $2 per bushel. of scouting, that of Eagle Scout, In Serve-yourse- double-pointe- j lu the same period the local packing plants slaughtered 151,912 head of cattle, hogs and sheep. ' st 152-foo- j x ; culinary use. ' j i lf Chief of Finland and Daughter 1022, when he completed the requirements by winning his twenty-firmerit badge. His ambition Is to become a scoutmaster. West Jordan L. L. Renelesbach has t completed the sinking of a offices. -- refreshed Thursday after their rescue THE GUIDE Wednesday night, and some of them Dept, B, 1325 Englewood Ave Dallas Texas received newspaper correspondents at WE PAY YOU CASH SSfSEWfrt a hospital here. Physical examinaold plates, diamonds, discarded jewelry , tions are being made to make sure that teeth, return mail. points. Cash magneto GOLD BHVININO CO., by Fifth Ave.,NEWEMBIKg an immediate return to their normal References: ChathamPhenlx Bank, New YORtL York, life will not prove too great a strain. LADIES Why pay dollars for complexion Clothes were brought by their families powders, lotions, toilet goods, etc., when cost? to the hospital and when the physical You can make them at home, Enclose stamp for literature. WEB3TEB examinations are completed the men SALES CO.. Box 614. St. Paul, Minn. will go home for the first time in six I WANT FARMS The fiirst rodeo that has held in Beaver county proved to be a thriller. Such crowds of people never assembled in Beaver before nor since the big home coming event in 1914. The rodeo opened each day at 1 oclock with an immense crowd in the grandstand and in every conceivable sight-seeinspot. work at the A treat In the Peppermint flavored sugar-coate- d jacket and another In gum Inside the Peppermint-flavore- d b Beaver nooms, mitorv, which has twenty-fou- r Is occupied by unmarried men who e Miner Ate his Corn-coPipe Iron wood, Mich. The forty-threminers who spent live and a half days imprisoned in Pabst mine here were ever been Bingham Cyprus Hall, a dormitory erected by the Utah Copper company for its office employees, which was completed early in September, is now almost completely occupied. The dor- - Farmers Driven Out By Floods Fort Smith, Ark. Threatened floods Thursday were driving farmers in the Arkansas and Poteau river bottoms to seek safety on higher levels with livestock and equipment. Recent rains in ;he lowlands of Oklahoma drained by it Fort Smith have swollen both rivers :he two streams which flow together ind brought the Arkansas to flood stage. Weather bureaa officials in sending out warnings to inhabitants if the menaced area predicted a stage to twenty-fivhere of twenty-fou- r feet Friday morning. Flood stage is twenty-two feet. The flood will be of short Juration bureau officials here believe, and will confine itself to the territory from the mouth of the Neosha river near Fort Gibson, Okla., 150 miles west, to a point downstream miles west of Fort Smith. e ly quenched the flames which have been waxing and waning for a long period. Logan Cache county, already the lender in the dairy industry in the intermountain region on the basis of county rating, but cherishing a secret ambition to lead the nation in this particular activity, Tuesday opened its an-ucounty fair. As might be expected in a county where dairying stands supreme, where every farmer, regardless of his majot interest in agriculture keeps a small herd of dairy cows, the dairy department is outstandings and could, without little difficulty, be segregated from the remainder of the fair and be made to stand alone as a i.iry show of considerable merit. well on his property on the Bingham Drilling started last Sat- highway. is at present twenty-siThere urday. feet of water at the bottom of the well, A test will be made to determine whether or not the water is fit for d in a typhoon which raged though-m- t Monday. More than 100 junks, which were engaged in fishing in the "anton river estuary and off the coast tave not made port, and are believed ,o have been wrecked or sunk. The only known foreign casualty vas the drowning of a Dutch resident if Hongkong, who wras blown into the vater and drowned. Shipping at Hongkonk, a British col-mand at Macao, a Portugese settlement, wa3 badly battered by rough teas, but the wrind did compara-ivel- y little damage to the cities. Ships tt docks made fast with, additional ines and those anchored In exposed places were towed to safety. Thirty-fivnative fisherman clinging ;o wreckage were rescued by the crew f the British steamer Hydrangea, when lifeboats were driven through plunging seas to their rescue. Hongkong and Macao frequently lave been damaged by typhoons. Located on opposite sides of the Canton iver estuary, they are exposed to high winds. They are forty miles apart. Many lives were lost in Macao in 1923 when the city was badly damaged by :hree typhoons. Hongkong suffered severely, with considerable loss of life. The whole south China coast is sub-ieto devasting storms. The hurricane of August, 1922, was said to have tilled 60,000 Chinese at Swatow. e nesday's rainfall. In beet fields, where tho crop is almost too light to make harvesting remunerative, tho rain has softened the ground to an extent that digging beets is facilitated. The rain will have a tendency toward hastening the ripening of potatoes. Tooele Two miles of road on the Victory highway, in the vicinity of Mills junction, is now being resurfaced by a crew of men under the direction of William Russell, road supervisor. The highway is being graveled and graded. Wednesdays storm aided Commander John Rodgers, who was materially in hastening tho packing killed when his plane crashed In the down of the newly repaired highway. Delaware river, was hurled with full Salt Lake Snow on the mountains honors at Arlington Nutlonal and much-neederain in the valleys military cemetery. resulted from the storm which covered northern Utah and southern Idaho Wednesday night. In Salt Lake there HAS WON 69 BADGES was a precipitation of .95 of an inch. The entire Wasatch range was white-cappe- 678 head of cattle, hogs and sheep. CAN- RIVER ESTUARY; SHIPPING PEELS LOSS TON JUDGE CHATT Motorists Lose Through Theft New York Motorists lost $60,000,-00last year through the theft of automobiles and the present situation is an open challenge on the part of the underworld to the insurance companies, Alfred Reeves, general manager of the national automobile chamber of commerce. 0 Vera Cruz Storm Takes Six Lives Mexico City Official reports thus far state that six persons were .killed in Mondays tornado which struck Vera Cruz and Jalapa, but reports are trickling in indicating that several villages in remote sections have suffered heavily. h for cash buyers. Will deal with owner Answer only. quick. J. WALTON, It Indiana, Kansas City, Missouri. Successful "How did your wife come out with her Job of painting the car? we interestedly Inquired. Fine!" enthusiastically replied the husband of the paint sllnger. It w&i a complete success Why; the old boat doesnt look any worse now than It did before she began." Kansas City Times. 1 Especially Then My motto is: What is sorth doing is worth doing well. Mrs. Snapp I notice that when yon make a fool of yourself. Pathfinder. Mr. Snapp Ends paininone minute Dr.SchoU', safe, heaHni treatment for corn,. At drug andsure, shoe for Frtt Sample write The SchoU Mf. Co (tore, n,4r.( DXScholl's Zino-pad- s rut one on the pain Is gone t Relieve that itching, burning torment and start the healing with Provo Utah figures prominently In Missionaries in no Real Danger the canning industry of the United isShanghai The situation of the forStates, according to a bulletin just sued by the National Canners associaeign missionaries in the great Yangtze basin is serious, but there is no imtion, portraying the prodiguous scope mediate danger, according to teleof the industry. The total value of the graphed reports to missionary headoutput of commercially canned foods quarters here. The condition, an outin the United States, in 1923, was feeling, is 1574,465,398, not including the growth of recent cases of pineapple packedin HaTeka-maAbove are pictured Dr. Lauri Kristian Kelander, the President of improving. The missionaries of Cheng-tCounty Judge Orville Chatt of MITCHELL EYE SALVE and vicinity, far in the interior, are waii. The total in 1923 was made up heals inflamed eyes, granulated lids, N'eb., who has come into national Finland, with hls daughter, Miss Maja Lisa Relander, at their summer horn of, vegetables, $187,579,965; fruits, prominence by Imposing bread and on the Island of Kultaranta, which means the Golden Coast" Three months living under comparatively peaceful styea, etc. Sure. Safe. Speedy. 26c at all druggists. Hall & Ruckel, N. Y.G conditions. They number less than $80,223,510; fish and oysters, $72,758,-908- ; water sentences on Nebraska of every year the Finnish President resides at this summer palace, which I 200. Nothing has been received from soups, $27,134,649; meats, $42, surrounded by beautiful gardens and Is close to the sea. W. N. U, Sa.t Lake City, No. AO 1928. them to substantiate reports. 481,866, and milk, 164,702,226. 5.895,-74- 7 anti-foreig- n u -- |